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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

My
girlfriend found a couple cool things for me when she was out yard sale-ing
this past weekend. (Yard saling? Yard sailing?)

They
are decks of cards that are the exact size and shape of playing cards but
aren’t actually playing cards. Instead, each card displays a book or movie with
info about it on the back. It’s one of those things I think they used to make
before widespread internet made them seem silly (they were released in 1997 and
’98). But now they are paradoxically cool because you don’t see stuff like this
anymore.

The
list of books is pretty much your standard canon. The list of films is surprisingly
good, full of real gems that are off the beaten path but well worth your time.

The
most amusing thing about them is that each card distills the essence of the
book or film into one simple, charming, almost Wes Anderson-y illustration. Karen
Johnson is the artist for both decks. I’m assuming she did the pictures for every
other deck in the series—there’s a bunch of them: 52 Things to Try Once in Your
Life, 52 Amazing Science Experiments, 52 Way to Mend a Broken Heart, 52 Great
Cheap Dates, 52 Fun Things to Do in the Car. (I would think there would be some
overlap with the last two.)

Here’s a sampling:﻿

I
especially like The Long Goodbye and The Metamorphosis. They’re hanging on my
fridge. J

Monday, July 30, 2012

There
was an opinion piece in the NYTimes yesterday entitled “Is Algebra Necessary?”
It is the opinion of Andrew Hacker, the writer of the piece, that math above
the level of arithmetic should not be indiscriminately taught to all high
school and college students. He posits that mandatory algebra classes “[prevent]
us from discovering and developing young talent.” He also cites anecdotal evidence
that the current math requirements are responsible for the alarming high school
and college dropout rates.

It’s
an impassioned article, but Mr. Hacker’s argument is a particularly blatant petitio
principii. He says that algebra-level math has no practical application for 95%
of entry-level workers or for creative artists, and therefore should not be taught
to everyone. This line of reasoning reveals a belief that the purpose of math
classes is to make everyone proficient in math. This is an erroneous assumption.

The
point of math classes isn’t to teach everyone math. The point is to find
geniuses.

I
have a bit of insight into this. In college, I briefly toyed with the idea of
majoring in something that required a solid foundation in higher-level math.
After barely keeping my head above water in Calc I during the first semester, I
got absolutely demolished by Calc II in the second. I remember getting back the
first test in Calc II, a test I failed, as did 80% of the class. These test
results were met by the professors and TAs with little more than a nonchalant
shrug; they just applied a curve to the grading and moved on. They didn’t care
that so many had failed, but you can bet the ones who passed certainly caught
their attention. Having been disabused of the notion that I had the chops to
become a biochemist, I quickly switched majors and moved on with my life.

So
why not just let the students decide for themselves what they are good at and let
them drop math as early as possible? The answer is simple: The education system
is designed to root out the best of the best. And the bigger the pool of
people, the better the odds of finding that person with exceptional skills.

Think
of it like you’re running a high school basketball team. Let’s say that the
team needs a capable 3-point shooter. So you start your search for someone
who can fulfill this very specific role. How do you find this person? Ideally,
you’d have all the students in the school come to the gym and take a hundred
3-pointers, regardless of how tall or athletic they were. You’d want everyone
to take a hundred shots, even those who didn’t want to play basketball. Why?
Because you never know. In the end you’d have a good idea who your 3-point
shooter should be, and it might be someone who never considered picking up a
basketball, someone with a natural skill that can’t be taught. If you did manage
to find an especially gifted 3-point shooter, you wouldn’t care that you just
put 99% of the student body through a pointless and stressful shooting drill.
The end justified the means. That’s how math departments operate. They are
perfectly willing to leave behind smoking ash heaps of defeated, demoralized students
if it allows them to find that one promising mind. In fact, the more who fail,
the easier their search is.

Must
we put our students through such a draconian process? Is it that important to
find people who are good at math? The simple and obvious answer is: Of course.
Even Mr. Hacker concedes that “mathematics, both pure and applied, is integral
to our civilization.” The people who understand and practice the highest levels
of math change all our lives for the better. That is why math classes will
continue to be compulsory.

But
make no mistake about it, the other academic departments are run the same way. Mr.
Hacker quotes a math professor as saying, “Our civilization would collapse
without mathematics.” Every other professor would say the same about his or her
respective field. Teachers of English, History, Philosophy—they all think their
subjects are of paramount importance. And they are all looking for geniuses to
contribute to their field. That’s why everyone in high school is forced to learn
about WWII, write essays about the categorical imperative, read The Catcher in the Rye. For the
mathematically inclined students, doing these things is probably just as
excruciating as taking an algebra class is to everyone else. But, again, it’s all for the
cause of discovering brilliance. In this way, each professor is like a recruitment
ambassador for his or her field. It is with this perspective that a lot of the
unintentional humor of Mr. Hacker’s editorial can be appreciated. His byline
reveals that he’s an emeritus professor of political science at Queens College.
A poli-sci guy railing against algebra is like a Duke basketball recruiter disparaging
the program at UNC. There’s hardly pure objectivity going on here.

The
NYTimes has run a couple of articles about math’s difficulty lately. Is there
something that’s making this a talking point in the culture right now? How’s
this for a theory: Until fairly recently, if you wanted to learn about
higher-level math, you had to go to a textbook. Now that same information—once locked securely away in $99 textbooks—is a Google or Wikipedia search
away, readily accessible to everyone. That is not to say that you can pick up
all there is to know about calculus by reading its Wikipedia page. But reading
it will probably give you at least a rudimentary idea of a few of its concepts.
You’ll probably end up knowing enough to know that there’s a lot you don’t
know. This can be a discomfiting state to be in. A few years ago it was hard to
even be exposed to this stuff outside a classroom setting, and so a total
ignorance of it was not only possible but likely. And as we know, ignorance is
bliss. But a little knowledge can be burdensome and stress-inducing. The
realization that we are unable to grasp something we’ve been conditioned,
through years of academic inculcation, to think of as part of the “standard” curriculum
may be causing an anxiety and acute feeling of inadequacy that is manifesting
itself in the lashing-out at the thing causing that feeling, viz. difficult
math.

But
I don’t know. We might have to turn to the psychology geniuses for an answer to
that one.

The free promotion for Deadly Reflections last week was the most successful one I've done yet. I want to thank all the people who blogged and tweeted and generally got the word out, especially Darlene's Book Nook, Tracey Spiteri, Free Kindle Books, and Paula over at Flurries of Words. Thank you for helping me get the book into the hands of people who would enjoy it.

I also want to thank all those who participated in the promotion. If you snagged a free copy or have since gotten it (still only $0.99), please leave a review—good or bad—on Amazon or Goodreads after you're done reading it. Reviews and feedback are how a book makes its way in the world. After uploading it to Amazon there's not a lot I can do as an author besides stand on the sidelines and cheerlead and hope for the best. I hope that during the past week it has found many welcoming and appreciative homes. If yours was one of them, let me know.

And if Deadly Reflections wasn't up your particular alley, well, all I can say is that I sincerely hope the next one is.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Reluctantly, she knocked on the door.
She had been standing on the porch for many minutes, quietly and slowly freezing
in the chilled night air. Her knuckles stung as she rapped them against the
door.

There was no immediate answer, and her
insides swelled with hope. But then the door opened and Richard peered out at
her. Her heart sank, but she tried not to show it.

Richard stood there for a second, regarding
her with an inscrutable expression, before saying, “Well, hello there.”

She smiled, and between the cold and
her anguish, it almost hurt, the smile. It was a fissure that had opened across
her face, splitting it painfully. She opened her mouth to speak, but no words
came out.

Richard leaned back inside, the top half
of his body disappearing behind the door. A light came on above her. She
squinted at it, like a person dazed.

Richard straightened himself and
looked at her with a pleasant enough expression, though his smile wasn’t as big
or generous as it should have been, she thought. He put his hands in his
pockets and leaned against the doorjamb. Her heart was racing.

Richard looked like he wanted to say
something but couldn’t find the words. He seemed more amused than frustrated by
his inability to speak.

She started to explain again why she
was there, repeating what she had told him on the phone. Her words were
disjointed, tumbling out of her mouth all a-jumble. He started nodding in the
way of inattentive people.

“Are you cold?” Richard said suddenly.
Before she could say anything he reached out for her hands, which had been tucked
under her arms. He grasped them and pulled them toward him. She let him.
Richard brought them close to his face and made a show of inspecting them.
“Mmm, they look positively frostbitten,” he murmured. He rubbed her hands,
interlacing his fingers with hers and gently squeezing.

She wanted to maintain eye contact
with him, but she couldn’t and instead looked down.

“Well, let’s get you inside,” Richard
said, the slightest hint of impatience in his voice.

He led her inside the house. In the
foyer, Richard offered to take her coat. She stretched one arm out and then the
other as he tugged the sleeves off. There was little in the way of incidental
contact between them as her coat was being removed, for which she was thankful.

They walked into the living room and
Richard told her to sit on the couch. She eased herself down, worried that he
would try to sit next to her. But he left the room without a word.

She stared straight ahead, still as
stone, transfixed by an ornate statuette on the mantelpiece across the room
that she wasn’t really looking at. She told herself she should leave, just get
up and go, in that reassuring manner that people have when telling themselves
they are free do something they know deep down is not an option.

Richard returned with two wine glasses
half-filled with crimson libation. He handed her one of them. She obediently
took it and brought it to her lap without taking a single sip. Oblivious to her
reluctance, Richard walked across the room, taking a healthy swig from his
glass. He sat down in an upholstered chair, and she felt a little more at ease.

But that modicum of comfort swiftly
vanished when many long moments passed in silence and she realized that Richard
had stationed himself in a spot where he was able to scrutinize her, which is
what he was doing, openly, with startling assurance. She nervously turned away
from his naked interest.

Richard cleared his throat and said,
“So. How are you?”

She started to tell him how things
were not so good, how she was in a bit of trouble and…. She trailed off when
she heard Richard chuckling softly. She shot him a glance, both quizzical and indicting.

Richard held up his hands in mock
defense. “I’m sorry,” he said, smirking. “Just so you know, the correct
response to ‘How are you?’ is ‘I’m fine, how are you?’ That’s what you’re
supposed to say, even when things aren’t fine. Especially when things aren’t fine. You’ve always had that problem,
you know—taking the question at face value. One of the many things you never
picked up. There’s always something
wrong. It doesn’t mean people really want to hear about it.

“It’s also rude,” he added, “to let a proffered
drink sit idly in your hands. What you have there is a vintage ’65. I opened it
for this special occasion.”

She tightened her lips guiltily and
took a few quick sips of the wine. Before she could tell him it was good, he
darted over to the couch, next to her. She reflexively tried to scoot away but
she was already flush against the armrest.

Richard reached out and started to rub
her back. She managed not to flinch too much.

“You look tired,” he murmured.

She shrugged her shoulders, a frozen
smile on her face.

He continued to trace slow circles on
her back. “I can’t believe you’re finally here. After all this time,” he said.
His voice was hushed, almost a whisper. She half-turned away from him,
realizing too late that she was exposing even more of her back to him, which
allowed Richard to place both of his hands on her.

She felt him shift on the couch,
bridging what little gap was between them. She instantly leapt up and took a
couple quick strides to the mantelpiece, feigning interest in the knick-knacks
that were on the shelf. She could see Richard in the mirror on the wall, and
she caught him rolling his eyes. But he remained on the couch, which was the
important thing.

She picked up a glass figurine and
started to ask him about it when she noticed that the couch was empty. She
swiveled around, frantic. Then she saw him lighting candles around the room. He
went from the coffee table to the glass stand next to the couch, leaving a
trail of small flames in his wake. He made his way over to the mantelpiece,
bringing the lighter up to the wick of the taper candle on the shelf. He
settled there, next to her, like newly perched crow.

Richard gazed at her. She gave him a small,
timid smile, then looked away. She took a few steps away from him, and he
stayed where he was, allowing her to move farther away.

Richard stared up at the ceiling
ruminatively. “You know, I used to think about how it’d play out. I thought about
it a lot, endlessly,” he said in a solemn voice. “I would envision it
happening, you coming here, how nervous we both would be, the initial
awkwardness. There would be a fair amount of talking around the matter, a lot
of beating around the bush, as it were. Are you familiar with that saying, Beating around the bush? Do they say
that where you’re from? I never did find out where you’re from....”

She started to tell him but he stopped
her with a dismissive wave.

“I’m sorry, Favia,” he said. “I don’t
care. There was a time that I would’ve listened to you tell me all about where
you grew up, your childhood stories and all that, but I just can’t even pretend
to care right now.”

Richard drummed his fingers on the
shelf for a moment, then continued: “I had a theory, back in the day. I thought
that if I could somehow get you in my house—or, more specifically, get you in
my bedroom—something would happen. Even if you had no intention of anything
happening, even if you were sure that it’d be a simple friendly visit. You told
me so many times that you’d do that: stop in for a nice, friendly visit. And I
believed you for the longest time. But if you ever did, I was convinced that if
I could somehow get you in my bedroom, the setting and situation would force something to happen. Like when you
put a pot of water on the stove…it will
boil over at some point. The components of you, me, and my bedroom would lead
to inevitable events. I was sure of it.”

Richard furrowed his brow in
remembrance. “It’s like these dreams I used to have,” he said. “They were
awful. I would be zapped into a situation, without warning, without
explanation. I’d be me but someone else, in that weird, obscure way that makes
complete sense for the duration of the dream. The circumstances I was inserted
into were horrible. I’ve forgotten most of them, but I do remember one where I
was suddenly one of those old-time executioners. Like back in the Middle Ages.
During a public execution in the town square with all the townspeople gathered
around, the whole bit. There was this makeshift stage or platform so everyone
could see, and the condemned person had his hands bound behind him and was bent
over a block, his head hanging over a basket. And I had to kill him. It didn’t
matter that I had no idea what the man had done or what had led to my being
there. All I knew was that I had a huge axe in my hands and I was wearing a black
hood. The crowd urging me on. I had to do it. The situation called for it. It
made me realize that time and place dictates action more than anything. Not
your will, or desire, or sense of right and wrong. Put someone in a certain
situation and they are capable of doing anything.”

She wanted desperately to leave. She
couldn’t stop trembling. Richard stood there, watching her. She put her hands
on the shelf and sagged forward. She found herself face to face with the statuette
she was inattentively staring at before. It was a sinister-looking gargoyle,
its eyes demonically slanted, its maw contorted with hideous intent. She felt
sick.

Richard moved closer to her, and she
felt his arms start to wrap around her. With a choked sob, she tried to ask him
a question, but her words came out in broken pieces, her voice trailed off into
silence.

But something must have gotten through.
She felt his hands halt their slow approach and slide away. Richard walked away
from her. She quickly wiped her eyes, smearing her eyeliner all over her face.

Richard came up behind her. “Favia,”
he said softly.

She turned around and her eyes were
immediately drawn to the stack of bills Richard was holding out to her. She
felt her spirits rise as she eagerly took the money from him. She briefly
luxuriated in the weight of it in her hands before stuffing it into her pocket.
She smiled at him gratefully.

“Of course I was going to give you that,”
Richard said. “I’m happy to help you in any way I can.” He was not smiling; she
didn’t notice.

She was somehow able to reach out and
give his arm a pat. She then mumbled about needing to leave, assuring him that
she’d be back again sometime.

Richard made a sound like a sigh. “Ok
Favia, I understand. Always on the move. Always too busy, always calling and
hanging up.” He displayed his teeth. “But before you go, there’s a favor I want
to ask of you.”

Before her heart could start to race
again, he said, “Look at me.”

She looked up.

“Just look at my face,” he directed,
not unkindly.

She did. She looked right into Richard’s
eyes for the first time.

“How do you think I look?” he asked.

She started to say that he looked
great, how young he looked, how nice his eyes were, how he looked like he
always had….

Richard stopped her, turning her
toward the hanging mirror. “Let’s now look at you, and I’ll tell you what I
see.” After a moment’s inspection: “You look old, Favia.”

She glanced at him, expecting to see a
jocular expression on his face, but instead his mouth was a tight, serious line
and his eyes reflected nothing but dark clouds. “Not older,” he clarified.
“Just old. It’s been, what, twenty years since we met? And now you look old and
I look the same…isn’t that strange?”

She twitched nervously, started to
insist that she should be going….

“Wait, please,” Richard said. “I just
need to tell you this one last thing, then you can go spend that money on your
troubles.” He went to the couch and motioned for her to take seat. She
reluctantly went to the couch, sitting as far away from him as possible.

Richard took a deep breath. A long
exhalation. “I wish I wasn’t your last option,” he muttered, barely audible, as
if he were talking to himself.

Richard looked up at her, and said,
louder, in the nature of a formal address: “Favia, you won’t understand what
I’m going to tell you. To be honest, you’ve never understood a single word that’s
come out of my mouth. But I need to tell you this, I need you to hear this.

“Twenty years ago, a short while
before I saw you for the first time, I discovered something. Something magical,
beyond the scope of explanation, not that you’d understand if it were….Suffice
it to say that it’s a concoction of sorts, made of constituent elements one
would not consider imbibing separately.”

Richard looked into her blank eyes and
shook his head sadly.

“There’s a drink, ok? When you drink
it, you stop aging. You are frozen at your current age.”

Richard saw her subtly nudging her
pocket, checking to see if the money was still there.

“When I met you, I hadn’t had it for
very long,” he continued. “Just long enough to know that it worked. And I was
just starting the process of deciding who to share it with. I knew I wanted to
share this amazing thing with someone special, someone I could imagine spending
eternity with. Then I saw you, like a vision….” His shoulders slumped. “Or
maybe you were simply just another pretty girl. In any event, I found you
attractive.”

She automatically thanked him for the
compliment while eyeing the door. She wanted to leave. She wasn’t feeling well,
a little light-headed and woozy.

Richard couldn’t stop himself from
letting out a short laugh. “Yes, and I’ve made that abundantly clear to you throughout
the years. But you seem to have a potion yourself that makes you immune to my
blandishments.” The twinkle in his eye was quickly extinguished and he became
somber again.

“There were a couple times when you
seemed so close to coming over….I mean, why didn’t you? Don’t answer, I know
why. All those men, lavishing you with attention…but they’re gone now, aren’t
they? They’ve abandoned the old hag. But that’s not how you see yourself, is
it?” He looked at her with renewed curiosity. “I wonder how similar your experience
is to mine. That is: Can one’s conviction overpower reality? Can one believe in
something so much that it doesn’t matter what is actually happening?”

“Language is such a barrier for you,
isn’t it? I wish there was a way to know if you are below-average intelligence
even in your own country….” He was talking to himself again.

Though her desire to leave had
intensified beyond all measure, she was feeling more and more sluggish, weighed
down by something unseen.

“Anyway,” Richard said, refocusing his
attention on her, “I know you haven’t asked but you might notice that I’m still
alone. It’s still just me, it always has been, all this time. Maybe now you
realize that finding someone was a much bigger decision for me than it is for most
people. This was a life-altering decision, for two people, made even more
momentous when the lives in question would last forever.”

He pondered quietly for a second. “Is
it going to be forever? Am I to never die? Nothing I’ve experienced in the last
twenty years leads me to believe that I will perish—not from so-called ‘natural
causes’ at least—but what happens when the planet ceases to exist? Or the whole
universe, even? A question not many face: Will I survive the end of the
universe? Have you even heard of ‘heat death’?”

Her mouth felt like it was full of molasses,
her head full of rocks.

“I could still have you join me,”
Richard said quietly. “There’s no age limit. You just stop aging the first time
you take it, whatever age you might be.” His eyes were sad and full of regret.
“But this is a gift for the young. For someone older it would cease to be a
blessing. Even if you haven’t come to terms with it yet, you are old, Favia. There’s no two ways about
it. And I’m not sure I could bear looking at you like this for eternity.”

She couldn’t feel her arms or legs.

“You might ask—well, not you but
someone else,” Richard said, “someone else might ask if there’s a catch to
making this thing I’ve discovered, something, say, that complicates the
creation of this magical elixir. And that person would be very acute indeed,
because there is in fact a catch. There’s always
a catch. Are you following me? This is the last bit….”

She was barely registering what he was
saying. It took everything she had to take one shallow, ragged breath after
another.

“There are two things,” he was saying.
“One: this potion, elixir, whatever you want to call it—it needs to be taken
every year. So I suppose it was misleading to say that one remains ageless
forever, more like you remain that way for exactly one year. Then you start
aging again, necessitating another draught of the concoction.

“The other thing is that it requires
blood. A good-sized cup’s worth. There’s no way around it. And not just any
blood, but the blood of someone 25 years older than the biological age of the
imbiber. I’ll spare you the details of how I figured this out; it was basically
a lot of trial and error.”

Her vision was gone. She could no
longer discern anything around her. Everything was either light or darkness.

Richard’s voice droned on. “As far as
caveats go, this one could not be more perfect. My profession afforded me easy
access to the blood of elders…it was just a matter of siphoning off the
necessary amount every year. Not enough to draw attention to what was
happening. No one knew what was happening, not even the unwitting donors. I
don’t need to take so much that they die, you see. Just enough for a
healthy-sized drink.”

A roar was building in her ears,
making it hard for her to hear anything.

“I was let go from my job three weeks
ago,” Richard said. “A potential disaster. But I had a plan, a plan I’d been
formulating for a couple years now.” He looked over at her. “You never told me
your age, Favia. Sure, you told me different numbers now and then, but I could
never get a handle on it, you were always so cagey about it, like all women of
a certain age. But even by my most conservative estimates, I figure you must be
49, 50. Almost certainly older. Which makes you old enough.”

Richard picked up her hand and rubbed
it. “I can see that what I slipped into your drink has been doing its job.
It’ll all be over soon. Now: could I have found an old, doddering geriatric,
devoid of faculties, to get what I needed? Or could I just get a similar job
elsewhere? Probably. But this will take care of two problems at once. See,
you’ve haunted me, Favia… all these years you’ve haunted me. I’ve waited twenty
years for you, hoping you’d come around. I haven’t shared my amazing gift with
anyone in all this time. There were times I considered it, some young thing would
appear who I thought I could potentially share my life with. But every time
that happened, I thought of you. And at a certain point, I realized I would
never stop thinking of you.”

Tears were streaming down his face. “I
need you out of the picture, Favia. Only then will I be able to find someone
else. I need you to be gone. I need to be free of you,” he sobbed.

It took a few minutes for Richard to
compose himself.“In a way,” he
sniffled, “you’ll live on, just as I will. I plan to extract all I can and
preserve it, freeze it, so I won’t need any more for a couple decades, maybe.
We’ll live together. It’ll be nice.”

By this time, Favia was lost in her
own private oblivion.

It was only after the deed was done
that Richard came to a horrible realization.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

First
and foremost, my thoughts and prayers go out to the victims and their families.

Once
again, we are confronted with an event that irrevocably taints our perception
of a place we formerly regarded as a sanctuary. I was wrapping up my freshman
year when Columbine happened, and the school hallways and classrooms were thenceforth
embedded with a feeling of unease and tension. After 9/11, the very act of
going outside felt like entering a different world, strange and vaguely
sinister. I had made plans to see The
Dark Knight Rises with friends next Tuesday—plans we all intend on keeping—and
I’m sure I won’t be able to help noting where the emergency exits are and
mentally planning escape routes.

All
of us are left with the unenviable task of reconciling the tragedy with how we
view the world. We have to somehow allow that something this dreadful and awful
and frightening could happen—and did
happen—in the world we inhabit and in the end arrive at an outlook of this
world that doesn’t drive us to complete despair.

After
those of us with no direct connection to the tragedy offer our sympathies to the
friends and family of those in the theater—people who are experiencing
unimaginable grief—the question of appropriate action gets raised. The Paris
premiere of The Dark Knight Rises was
scheduled later that day; it was rightly canceled. The promotion of a movie all
of a sudden seemed like the most irrelevant thing, all the smiling faces and
congratulatory sentiments and funny anecdotes of what happened during production…even
the weightier discussions involved with artwork well made seemed pointless.

An
artist’s place in the world can sometimes feel a little precarious after
world-shaking tragedy. This is what the creators of The Dark Knight Rises are undoubtedly going through. Not only is
their movie forever attached to a deplorable event, perpetrated by a deplorable
man, but the movie itself, the thing they’d all been working on for months,
seems beside the point, shunted off to the side, overlooked. This attitude and
position toward the movie is, of course, the correct one to have. For what is
art—which is a form of entertainment, really—in the face of bullets being
discharged from an assault rifle into human targets? (One minor reprieve is
that, as far as I can tell, The Dark
Knight Rises hasn’t seriously been blamed for what happened yet, an
accusation that would open up a whole other can of worms.)

What
the artist struggles with in the days afterward is a real sense of hope-/helplessness.
If the world can, in the blink of an eye, render the thing that defines you as a person meaningless,
otiose, irrelevant, then what’s the point? The answer to that lies in
expectation, both others’ and one’s own. The world does not crumble after a
tragedy; it lives on, due to everyone doing what is expected of him or her.
Policemen are expected to keep upholding the law, firefighters are expected to
keep responding to fires, teachers are expected to keep teaching, bakers are
expected to keep baking. And artists are expected to keep creating art. That’s
what they do. And if they
disintegrated into a paralyzed mess of self-doubt and despair, our
understanding would only go so far and we would eventually regard them with the
same disappointment we would have for a Senator or a brain surgeon who, in the
face of tragedy, throws up his hands and stops coming to work, all while saying
“What’s the point?” The point is that we continue to give the world what we
claim we can offer it. That’s all anyone expects. Carpenters make tables,
bakers make cupcakes, artists make art. It’s that simple.

When
9/11 happened, I was just starting my senior year. By that time, I had decided
that I wanted to write, that the way I wanted to be presented to the world was through
my writing, and, in preparation for a lifetime’s service in this field, I had
already started to think of myself as an artist. On that awful day, we were
sent home early from school and classes were canceled for a couple days. After I had had enough of the terrible imagery
on TV, I sat down and started to write. I had no idea what I was going to
write, I just felt compelled to do it. I spent ten hours each of the next
couple days at my desk, typing away. By the time we had to go back to school, I
had completed a screenplay from scratch. It had nothing to do with 9/11; it was
a dramatic character piece about relationships. It was only afterward that I realized
it was my formal affirmation of what I wanted to do, to be. Writing that
screenplay felt like the first mature, adult thing I had ever done.

Doing
what we are supposed to do helps us and others make sense of the world. If I
had to say, the next time you hear from me, it’ll be in the form of some art.

About Me

So I'm officially an author. My book is called Deadly Reflections, and is available on the Kindle Store right this second. I encourage anyone who likes a good love story with paranormal aspects to check it out!